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The Need to Belong: Understanding Human Attraction and Relationships

Explore the fundamental human motive to belong and its impact on well-being, happiness, and social connections. Learn about the importance of proximity, familiarity, and physical attractiveness in forming relationships.

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The Need to Belong: Understanding Human Attraction and Relationships

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  1. Chapter 9 Attraction and Close Relationships

  2. Need to Belong: A Fundamental Human Motive

  3. The Need to Belong • The need to belong is a basic human motive. • We care deeply about what others think of us. • Those with a network of close social ties tend to be happier, healthier, and more satisfied with life than those who are more isolated.

  4. Social Media Networks

  5. The Thrill of Affiliation • Need for Affiliation: The desire to establish social contact with others. • We are motivated to establish and maintain an optimum balance of social contact. • Stress arouses our need for affiliation. • “Fearful misery loves company.” • But, “embarrassed misery seeks solitude.” • “Misery loves the company of those in the same miserable situation.”

  6. Shyness • Sources • Inborn personality trait • Learned reaction to failed interactions with others • Painful consequences • Negative self-evaluations • Expectations of failure in social encounters • Self-blame for social failures • Self-imposed isolation

  7. The Agony of Loneliness • A feeling of deprivation about social relations. • Most likely to occur during times of transition or disruption. • Loneliest group in American society are those 18 to 30 years old. • We employ various strategies to combat loneliness.

  8. The Initial Attraction

  9. Perspectives on Attraction • We are attracted to others with whom a relationship is directly or indirectly rewarding. • All humans exhibit patterns of attraction and mate selection that favor the conception, birth, and survival of their offspring. • Evolutionary perspective

  10. Familiarity: Being There • Who are we most likely to become attracted to? • Two basic and necessary factors in the attraction process: • Proximity effect • Mere exposure effect

  11. The Proximity Effect • The single best predictor of attraction is physical proximity, or nearness. • Where we live influences the friends we make. • College students tend to date those who live either nearby or in the same type of housing as they do.

  12. Becoming Friends By Chance

  13. The Mere Exposure Effect • Contrary to folk wisdom, familiarity does not breed contempt. • The more often we are exposed to a stimulus, the more we come to like that stimulus. • Familiarity can influence our self-evaluations.

  14. Virtual Familiarity Breeds Liking

  15. Virtual Familiarity Breeds Liking

  16. Physical Attractiveness:Getting Drawn In • We react more favorably to others who are physically attractive than to those who are not. • Bias for beauty is pervasive. • Is physical beauty an objective or subjective quality?

  17. What is Beauty? • Some argue that certain faces are inherently more attractive than others. • High levels of agreement for facial ratings across ages and cultures. • Physical features of the face are reliably associated with judgments of attractiveness. • Babies prefer faces considered attractive by adults.

  18. Is Beauty a Subjective Quality? • People from different cultures enhance their beauty in very different ways. • Ideal body shapes vary across cultures, as well as among racial groups within a culture. • Standards of beauty change over time. • Situational factors can influence judgments of beauty.

  19. Romantic Red: The Color of Attraction?

  20. Why Are We Blinded by Beauty? • Inherently rewarding to be in the company of people who are aesthetically appealing. • Possible intrinsic and extrinsic rewards • Tendency to associate physical attractiveness with other desirable qualities. • What-is-beautiful-is-good stereotype

  21. When Being Seen Leads to Disbelief

  22. Is the Physical Attractiveness Stereotype Accurate? • Good-looking people do have more friends, better social skills, and a more active sex life. • But beauty is not related to objective measures of intelligence, personality, adjustment, or self-esteem. • The specific nature of the stereotype also depends on cultural conceptions of what is “good.”

  23. The Benefits and Costs of Beauty • Being good-looking does not guarantee health, happiness, or high self-esteem. • Attributional problems with being good-looking: • Is the attention and praise one receives due to one’s talents or just one’s good looks?

  24. Other Costs of Beauty • Pressure to maintain one’s appearance. • In American society, pressures are particularly strong when it comes to the body. • Women are more likely than men to suffer from the “modern mania for slenderness.” • Overall, being beautiful is a mixed blessing. • Little relationship between appearance in youth and later happiness.

  25. First Encounters: Getting Acquainted • We tend to associate with others who are similar to ourselves. • Four types of similarity are most relevant • Demographic • Attitude • Attractiveness • Subjective Experience

  26. A Two-Stage Model of the Attraction Process

  27. Matching Hypothesis • People tend to become involved romantically with others who are equivalent in their physical attractiveness. • Matching is predictive of progress in a relationship.

  28. Why Don’t Opposites Attract? • Is there support for the complementarity hypothesis, which holds that people seek others whose needs “oppose” their own? • Research shows that complementarity does not influence attraction.

  29. First Encounters:Liking Others Who Like Us • Heider (1958): People prefer relationships that are psychologically balanced. • A state of balance exists when the relationship is characterized by reciprocity. • Mutual exchange between what one gives and what one receives • Liking is mutual, which is why we tend to like others who indicate that they like us.

  30. First Encounters: Pursuing Those Who Are Hard to Get • Does the hard-to-get effect exist? • We prefer people who are moderately selective to those who are nonselective or too selective. • We are turned off by those who reject us. • Psychological reactance can increase or decrease attraction.

  31. Mate Selection: The Evolution of Desire • Men and women by nature must differ in their optimal mating behaviors. • Women must be highly selective because they are biologically limited in the number of children they can bear and raise in a lifetime. • Men can father an unlimited number of children and ensure their reproductive success by inseminating many women.

  32. Sex Differences in Mate Preference

  33. Supporting Evidence for the Evolutionary Perspective • Universal tendency in desired age for potential mate. • Men tend to seek younger women. • Women tend to desire older men. • Men and women become jealous for different reasons. • Men become most upset by sexual infidelity. • Women feel more threatened by emotional infidelity.

  34. Mate Selection: Sociocultural Perspectives • Women trade youth and beauty for money because they often lack direct access to economic power. • Men are fearful of sexual infidelity because it represents a threat to the relationship, not fatherhood issues. • The differences typically found between the sexes are small compared to the similarities.

  35. Conspicuous Consumption • If women are drawn to men who have wealth or the ability to obtain it, then it stands to reason that men would flaunt their resources the way the male peacock displays his brilliantly colored tail.

  36. Sex Ration Effects on Conspicuous Consumption

  37. Expressions of Love • Male and female stereotypes would suggest that while men are more likely to chase sex, women to seek love

  38. Who’s The First To Say “I Love You”?

  39. Jealousy • Jealousy is a common and normal human reaction, men and women may be aroused by different triggering events

  40. Close Relationships

  41. Intimate Relationships • Often involve three basic components: • Feelings of attachment, affection, and love • The fulfillment of psychological needs • Interdependence between partners, each of whom has a meaningful influence on the other • How do first encounters evolve into intimate relationships? • By stages or by leaps and bounds?

  42. Stimulus-Value-Role Theory • Stimulus Stage: Attraction is sparked by external attributes such as physical appearance. • Value Stage: Attachment is based on similarity of values and beliefs. • Role Stage: Commitment is based on the performance of such roles as husband and wife.

  43. How Do Intimate Relationships Change? • Most researchers reject the idea that intimate relationships progress through a fixed sequence of stages. • For reward theories of love, quantity counts. • There are qualitative differences between liking and loving, as well as different forms of love.

  44. The Intimate Marketplace:Social Exchange Theory • People are motivated to maximize benefits and minimize costs in their relationships with others. • Relationships that provide more rewards and fewer costs will be more satisfying and endure longer. • The development of an intimate relationship is associated with the overall level of rewards.

  45. Relationship Expectations • Comparison Level (CL): Average expected outcome in relationships. • Comparison Level for Alternatives (CLalt): Expectations of what one would receive in an alternative situation. • Investments in relationship increase commitment.

  46. Relational Building Blocks

  47. The Intimate Marketplace:Equity Theory • Most content with a relationship when the ratio between the benefits and contributions is similar for both partners. • Balance is what counts.

  48. Types of Relationships • Exchange Relationships: Participants expect and desire strict reciprocity in their interactions. • Communal Relationships: Participants expect and desire mutual responsiveness to each other’s needs.

  49. Secure and Insecure Attachment Styles • Attachment Style: The way a person typically interacts with significant others. • Is the attachment style we had with our parents related to the attachment style we exhibit in our romantic relationships? • Does the attachment style you endorse today forecast potential outcomes tomorrow?

  50. Attachment Styles

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